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Re: A pet store holds cats and dogs. If the difference between [#permalink]

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18 Aug 2003, 01:17

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yes E. 4:5 is the correct answer.
the difference between the number of cats and dogs must be divisible by difference between the numbers that represent both animals in ratio. Since 13 is a prime number , it is only divisible by 1 and 13 .Therefore, the correct choice is the one where the difference between the numbers is 1.

Re: A pet store holds cats and dogs. If the difference between [#permalink]

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30 Jul 2014, 19:53

araspai wrote:

1. A pet store holds cats and dogs. If the difference between the number of cats and the number of dogs is 13. What could be the ratio of Cats to dogs in the pet store?a. 1:3 b. 1:4 c. 1:5 d. 2:5 e. 4:5

I got this same exercise but with diff options:a)4:1b)3:1c)4:3d)5:2e)5:3

The answer is C.Bunnuel, could you please help and explain it to us?Thank you!

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1. A pet store holds cats and dogs. If the difference between the number of cats and the number of dogs is 13. What could be the ratio of Cats to dogs in the pet store?a. 1:3 b. 1:4 c. 1:5 d. 2:5 e. 4:5

I got this same exercise but with diff options:a)4:1b)3:1c)4:3d)5:2e)5:3

The answer is C.Bunnuel, could you please help and explain it to us?Thank you!

A pet store holds cats and dogs. If the difference between the number of cats and the number of dogs is 13. What could be the ratio of Cats to dogs in the pet store?

A. 1:3 B. 1:4 C. 1:5 D. 2:5 E. 4:5

Say the ratio of cats to dogs is a/b. Then the number of cats would be ax and the number of dogs bx, for some positive integer x.

We are told that ax - bx = 13 --> x(a - b) = 13. Since 13 is a prime number it could be broken into the product of two positive multiples only in one way: x(a - b) = 1*13.

The above implies that either x = 1 and a - b = 13 or x = 13 and a - b = 1.

Therefore the correct answer should have the difference between numerator and denominator equal to 1 or 13.

For the original question only option which fits is E, 4:5. Cats = 13*4 = 52 and dogs = 13*5 = 65.

Answer: E.

For your question the answer would be C, 4:3, for the same reason._________________

Re: A pet store holds cats and dogs. If the difference between [#permalink]

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08 Aug 2014, 21:19

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Bunuel wrote:

Reni wrote:

araspai wrote:

1. A pet store holds cats and dogs. If the difference between the number of cats and the number of dogs is 13. What could be the ratio of Cats to dogs in the pet store?a. 1:3 b. 1:4 c. 1:5 d. 2:5 e. 4:5

I got this same exercise but with diff options:a)4:1b)3:1c)4:3d)5:2e)5:3

The answer is C.Bunnuel, could you please help and explain it to us?Thank you!

A pet store holds cats and dogs. If the difference between the number of cats and the number of dogs is 13. What could be the ratio of Cats to dogs in the pet store?

A. 1:3 B. 1:4 C. 1:5 D. 2:5 E. 4:5

Say the ratio of cats to dogs is a/b. Then the number of cats would be ax and the number of dogs bx, for some positive integer x.

We are told that ax - bx = 13 --> x(a - b) = 13. Since 13 is a prime number it could be broken into the product of two positive multiples only in one way: x(a - b) = 1*13.

The above implies that either x = 1 and a - b = 13 or x = 13 and a - b = 1.

Therefore the correct answer should have the difference between numerator and denominator equal to 1 or 13.

For the original question only option which fits is E, 4:5. Cats = 13*4 = 52 and dogs = 13*5 = 65.

Answer: E.

For your question the answer would be C, 4:3, for the same reason.

I understood till this point : The above implies that either x = 1 and a - b = 13 or x = 13 and a - b = 1.But how can you deduce this from above : Therefore the correct answer should have the difference between numerator and denominator equal to 1 or 13. Please explain.

Re: A pet store holds cats and dogs. If the difference between [#permalink]

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15 Aug 2015, 02:20

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Re: A pet store holds cats and dogs. If the difference between [#permalink]

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28 Oct 2015, 11:59

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The logic I used to answer this question is this: I thought about the difference between both C - D = 13Which means that (if you didn't look at the answer choices) you could technically pick any ratio where the differences were 13. For instance: 7:20 , 6:19 , 1:14 , etc etc, All of these ratios are correct, but the problem here is that we do not have any answer choices that will match this, which is why it is safe to multiply each answer choice by 13 to see which ones will give you a difference of 13 when you subtract them by one another.

D) 4:5 ---> (13)* 4:5 *(13) ===> 52:65 , which when you subtract these it gives you 65-52 = 13.

This is a much easier way to tackle this problem just by looking at the problem statement and realizing that your answer is not amongst one of them.

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That's a clever way to interpret this question and it showcases how paying attention to the answer choices (and using them to your advantage) can lead to quicker solutions to a given question (than just doing long-winded calculations).

We all are aware that to convert ratio scale values to actual values, we multiply the ratio by the multiplier. We have also often used the sum of values concept for the "total" of actual values.This question tests the same concept with the difference between values. If the actual difference between values is 13, what could be the difference in values on the ratio scale? To get 13, the multiplier could have been 1 or 13. In case it was 1, then the difference between the values on ratio scale would be 13. If instead, the multiplier is 13, the difference between the values on the ratio scale would be 1. Only option (E) satisfies this condition (difference between values on ratio scale is 1)
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